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Broward County Public Schools

District Literary Fair

Handbook for High School and Middle School


2020-2021
INTRODUCTION
he Language Arts Department of Broward County Public Schools established the District-Level
Literary Fair in 1998 to provide an opportunity for middle and high schools to recognize their
students’ literary accomplishments. The district fair provides a showcase for outstanding student
compositions and language arts projects. The categories for writing competition include various
types of poetry and prose. This handbook is designed to help students, coordinators, and teachers
plan for a successful fair.

LITERARY FAIR 2020-21


TABLE OF CONTENTS

Schedule for District Literary Fair……………………………………………………………….2

Guidelines for the School-based Literary Fair..………………………………………………….3

District Literary Fair Guidelines and Rules………………………………….…………………..4

Categories ………………………………………………………………………...…..………5-10

Student Entry Form for District Literary Fair…………………………………….……………..11

Student Entry Form for Poet Laureate…………………….. …………………………………...12

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DISTRICT LITERARY FAIR SCHEDULE FOR 2020-2021

Activity Date/Deadline

Distribution of literary fair handbook/materials Fall 2020

Deadline for entries February 23, 2020


(submission portal
open on January 4)

Judging of projects/entries March 5-15, 2020

Notification of winners by email April 2, 2020

Literary Fair Awards Program April 29, 2020


Live Virtual Ceremony

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GUIDELINES FOR THE SCHOOL-BASED LITERARY FAIR

1. Holding a school-based competition is required as a prerequisite to enter the district


fair. To avoid a need for modification of projects that may be entered in the district fair,
schools should use the specifications required at the district fair.

2. It is recommended that schools utilize some (or all) of the categories in the district fair.
First place entries ONLY are to be submitted to the district fair.

3. It is the responsibility of the classroom teacher and competition coordinator to see that all
entries are properly categorized.

4. The Language Arts Competitions/Literary Fair Coordinator should determine in advance


the criteria for judging each category, secure judges for each category, and facilitate the
judging of all entries. Utilization of district fair category descriptions and specifications,
as listed in this handbook, are highly recommended.

5. All entries submitted for the literary fair must be the original work of the student. Entries
found to be plagiarized will be immediately disqualified. Please check qualifying entries
for plagiarism prior to submitting to the district competition.

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DISTRICT LITERARY FAIR GUIDELINES 2020-21

1. All entries are to be submitted electronically using the appropriate MS Forms link located on
page 12 of this handbook and in the District Literary Fair Canvas course. Printed, mailed, or
emailed submissions will not be accepted.
2. ONE official student entry form must be submitted for each entry:
a. Each entry form must be submitted electronically via the MS Forms link.
b. Each school may submit one entry per category. Any student(s) designated as the school’s
first place winner(s) is eligible to participate in the District Literary Fair.

3. Illustrations are now permitted but will not be a part of the judging. The only exceptions are
Children’s Books, Literary Comic Strips, Political/Satirical Cartoons, Poetry Movie Posters,
Novel/Short Story Movie Posters, and Poetry Interpretation Posters. All entries and artwork must
be the original work of the student. Ekphrastic poems MUST be accompanied by the piece of art
that inspires it (see format specifications on page 8).

4. Entries may be displayed for the public. Please be sure they are free of errors and any stray
marks, and typed in Times New Roman 12 font, double spaced—or according to the category
specifications. The only exceptions to this are the haiku and cinquain, which may be typed in a
larger size font. Neither the writer’s name nor the name of the school should appear on the
front or the back of the entry.

5. There will be multiple judges per entry, and all decisions are final.

6. Projects may be disqualified if they are not submitted according to district requirements. This
includes, but is not limited to, correct punctuation, grammar, mechanics, etc…

7. In each category a First Place, a Second Place, and a Third Place Award will be given.

8. ALL ENTRIES MUST BE THE ORIGINAL WORK OF THE STUDENTS SUBMITTING


THEM FOR JUDGING. All entries must be the work of a single student.

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PROSE CATEGORIES

Categories Description Specifications

Maximum length
– 10 pages (ms);
An original, illustrated story written in book format and designed to be 16 pages (hs).
read by children grades 1 – 5. A non-fiction book is also appropriate. Entry must be
Children’s Illustrations must be the original design of the student; they can be scanned page by
Book drawn by hand or on a computer. Students should not use patented page and be
characters (i.e. Donald Duck) or computer generated/clip art. submitted as one
file.

Min. length – 1
A short story, such as one of Aesop’s Fables, intended to reveal some page;
useful truth or precept, especially a story in which animals or Max. length – 4
Fable
inanimate objects speak and act like human beings. pages.

A researched-based piece of prose writing that expresses a particular


Minimum length
point of view on a subject. It should either communicate information
– 2 pages;
or share a personal thought in a formal style and be characterized by a
Maximum length
Formal Essay seriousness of purpose, dignity, and logical organization. It MUST
– 4 pages.
include citations and a correctly formatted works cited page.

Min. length – 2
A piece of prose writing that expresses a personal point of view in a
pages;
conversational style. It may contain elements of self-revelation,
Informal Max. length – 4
humor, and an unconventional theme. Letters to the editor are
Essay pgs.
acceptable entries in this category as well.
Minimum length
– 3 panels;
Comic strip with illustrations and dialogue. The comic strip MUST tell
Maximum length
an original story or be based on a literary work (which must be
– 1 full page (no
named). The strip may be hand-drawn or created digitally. Illustrations
more than 10
Literary must be the original design of the creator. Do NOT use patented
panels)
Comic Strip characters (i.e. Donald Duck) or pre-made computer-generated
Must be scanned
pictures (i.e. clip art). Hand-drawn comic strips must be outlined in
and submitted
black ink. All stray marks must be erased.
digitally as one
file.
Min. length – 1
A purely fictitious narrative usually involving supernatural persons, page;
Myth actions, or events and often embodying some popular explanation or Max. length – 4
conception of natural or historical phenomena. pages.

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A true account of an experience or event that is personally significant Minimum length
to the writer. The first person account may include elements of – 2 page;
Personal suspense and action, vivid description, and dialogue. It should express Maximum length
Narrative feelings of how the experience affected the writer or taught the writer – 4 pages.
something of importance.
Length – one
panel
Political/ A one panel cartoon with the punch line or dialogue written at the
Must be scanned
Satirical bottom. The cartoon must be based on a literary work or a current or
and submitted
Cartoon historical/political event.
digitally as one
file.
Maximum length
– 10 pages of
actual text of the
script
A script that contains dialogue, a minimum of two characters and stage
Title page,
directions. It will include a title page, a second page that lists
character list,
Scene Writing characters and gives a brief synopsis, and any other information that
and synopsis are
seems important to the understanding of the script. The successive
not included
pages will contain the actual text of the stage play.
within the page
count

Minimum length
A brief prose narrative that can be read usually in one sitting. Includes – 3 pages;
one conflict, a simple plot, characterization, one setting, one point of Maximum length
Short Story
view, one theme, and a specific literary style. Short stories are to be - 10 pages
submitted digitally.

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INTERPRETIVE CATEGORIES
Categories Description Specifications
Novel/Short Story Movie Posters replicate contemporary movie
posters and include the title, images which represent the text, a
catchphrase or slogan, the author/director, brief quotations/reviews
about the text. Entries will be
submitted as a
Middle school entries will choose a text (novel or short story) by Ray single
Novel/Short Bradbury. PowerPoint slide
Story Movie High school entries will choose a text (novel or short story) by F. saved as a PDF.
Poster Scott Fitzgerald. The slide may be
vertical or
Entry will be in the form of a single PowerPoint slide. Illustrations horizontal.
must be the original design of the student; they can be drawn by hand
or on a computer. Students should not use patented characters (i.e.
Donald Duck) or computer generated/clip art.

Poetry Movie Posters replicate contemporary movie posters and


include the title, images which represent the text, a catchphrase or
Entries will be
slogan, the author/director, brief quotations/reviews about the text.
submitted as a
single
Middle school entries will choose a poem by Carl Sandburg.
PowerPoint slide
Poetry Movie High school entries will choose a poem by Nikki Giovanni.
saved as a PDF.
Poster
The slide may be
Entry will be in the form of a single PowerPoint slide. Illustrations
vertical or
must be the original design of the student; they can be drawn by hand
horizontal.
or on a computer. Students should not use patented characters (i.e.
Donald Duck) or computer generated/clip art.

Poetry Interpretation Posters utilize original student artwork to convey


the meaning of a professionally published poem. Students select a Entries will be
poem from the poet of their choice and design a poster that serves as submitted as a
an interpretation of the text. The poster must include the title and single
Poetry author of the poem. PowerPoint slide
Interpretation saved as a PDF.
Poster Entry will be in the form of a single PowerPoint slide. Illustrations The slide may be
must be the original design of the student; they can be drawn by hand vertical or
or on a computer. Students should not use patented characters (i.e. horizontal.
Donald Duck) or computer generated/clip art.

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POETRY CATEGORIES
Category Description Specifications
An ABC poem has a series of lines that create a mood, picture, or feeling.
Lines are made up of words and phrases and the entire alphabet is covered.
The first word of line 1 begins with A; the first word of line 2 begins with
ABC Poetry B, etc. The best examples of ABC Poetry have enjambment and include
literary devices.
MIDDLE SCHOOL ONLY
A poem of five lines with the following syllables:
Line 1 - two syllables
Line 2 - four syllables
Line 3 - six syllables
Cinquain Line 4 - eight syllables
Line 5 – two syllables
End rhyme occurs seldom, but internal rhyme, assonance and consonance
appear frequently. The poem revolves around a cohesive idea or topic.

A poem that was inspired by or modeled from another poem, uses some
of the language from the model poem, but results in something new and
Must be at least
Copy Make unique to the student author. Students must attribute to the original
10 lines.
author (inspired by) and include a copy of the original poem.
MIDDLE SCHOOL ONLY
Poetry that is inspired by art. For the 2020-21 Literary Fair students are
to use a Jacob Lawrence painting to inspire a poem. His work can be
found at https://www.wikiart.org/en/jacob-lawrence, as well as many
other websites. The poem may be lined verse or free verse.
Ekphrastic Must be at least
The selected artwork must be downloaded to a document. The student
Poem 20 lines.
should then go to the Format menu and size the picture to no more than
3 inches in height. The picture should be centered at the top of the page;
the name of the artwork, artist and source from which it is downloaded
should be immediately below it. The title of the poem should follow.
Must be at least
Free Verse Poetry having no regular meter or rhyme.
15 lines.
A Japanese lyric poem of a fixed 17-syllables SOMETIMES points to
something in nature that has moved the poet. The haiku has the following
lines and syllables:
Haiku
Line 1 – five syllables
Line 2 – seven syllables
Line 3 –five syllables
Must be a
minimum of 35
A lyric poem in the form of an address to a particular subject, often
Ode lines and a
elevated in style or manner and written in varied and irregular meter.
maximum of 70
lines

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A poem imitating with ludicrous exactness, but ordinarily on a ridiculous
subject, the style and mannerisms of a serious composition (for example: Must be at least
Parody Poem
Hamlet’s “To be or not to be” speech). 15 lines.
HIGH SCHOOL ONLY
Must be at least
A poem written by one persona to be read by two people, sometimes
20 lines.
alternating, sometimes simultaneously. The poem shows different
May be written
Poem for perspectives or viewpoints on the same topic. A good example of a poem
in either one-
Two Voices for two voices is Langston Hughes’ poem “Mama and the Rent Man.”
column format
THIS POEM MIGHT ALSO be a bilingual poem incorporating English
or two-column
and another language, but it MUST reflect two distinct voices.
format.
Written on various topics. May express ideas, emotions, or tell a story.
Rhymed Precise word choice, sensory imagery, and compression of ideas are Must be at least
Verse characteristics of poetic expression. 16 lines.

French form consisting of six six-line stanzas and a three-line


envoy. The form is usually unrhymed. The effect of rhyme comes from a
fixed pattern of end-words; the end words in each stanza are the same but
arranged in a different sequence in each stanza. In the closing tercet, each
of the six words is used, with one in the middle of each line and one at
the end. The pattern of word-repetition is as follows where the words that
end the lines of the first sestet are represented by the numbers 1, 2, 3, 4,
5, 6.
Sestina Poem
1 2 3 4 5 6 End words of lines in first sestet
6 1 5 2 4 3 End words of lines in second sestet
3 6 4 1 2 5 End words of lines in third sestet
5 3 2 6 1 4 End words of lines in fourth sestet
4 5 1 3 6 2 End words of lines in fifth sestet
2 4 6 5 3 1 End words of lines in sixth sestet
(6 2) (1 4) (5 3) Middle and end words of lines of the tercet.

A rhymed verse that condenses the main ideas of a literary work. The
Shrinklit last two lines frequently present an ironic twist or question. Must be at least
Poem 16 lines.

A lyric poem of fourteen lines written in iambic pentameter.


Shakespearean sonnets have three quatrains followed by a rhymed
couplet. The rhyme scheme is abab cdcd efef gg. The main thought is
presented in the three quatrains and concluded in the couplet.
Petrarchan sonnets are divided into a group of eight lines (the
Sonnet octave) followed by a group of six lines (the sestet). The rhyme
scheme for the octave is abba abba. The rhyme scheme for the sestet
is cdecde. The octave presents a single thought, and the sestet
expands, contradicts or develops it in some way.

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Spoken Word poetry combines poetry with elements of the oral tradition, Must be 1 – 3
hip-hop, and theatre. It places heavy emphasis on the performance of the minutes in
poem; however, the written construction of the poem is of utmost length
importance. Spoken Word poems rely heavily on figurative language,
sensory details, and emotional connection. These poems may use Hard copies of
elements from other types of poetry, especially Free Verse and Rhymed poems must be
Verse. Spoken Word poems can tell stories, tackle social issues, or talk submitted with
about whatever the poet imagines. entry forms

Spoken No student name or school reference should appear in the video. Be Poets must
Word aware of clothing, signage, or logos that may be in the video that suggest project voice and
Performance the school or student name. speak clearly

Gestures and
facial
expressions
should
emphasize the
tone and theme
of the poem

The tritina is a ten-lined poem, divided over three tercets with a single
line at the end of the poem. Tritinas use three end words that are repeated
throughout the poem, much like a sestina. Having chosen your three
Tritina words, your pattern should look like this: ABC, CAB, BCA and the last
line have all three words in it, bringing you back to ABC.
MIDDLE SCHOOL ONLY

A French verse form in 19 lines with no set number of syllables per line.
The villanelle has a pattern of only two rhymes and is marked by its
alternating refrain. The poem has five tercets and a concluding quatrain.
The first line of the first stanza is repeated as the last line of the second
and the fourth stanzas, and as the second-to-last line in the concluding
quatrain. The third line of the first stanza is repeated as the last line of the
third and the fifth stanzas and as the last line in the concluding quatrain.
A1 b A2 – lines in the first tercet
a b A1 – lines in the second tercet
Villanelle
a b A2 – lines in third tercet
a b A1 – lines in the fourth tercet
a b A2 – lines in fifth tercet
a b A1 A2 – lines in final quatrain
The first line of the second through fourth tercets and the quatrain
rhymes A. The second line of each tercet and quatrain is not repeated buy
rhymes with the first tercet.
HIGH SCHOOL ONLY

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Poet Laureate of Broward County Schools

The Poet Laureate category is unique in that it serves to challenge participants by requiring them
to explore multiple forms of poetry rather than just a single form. Entries in this category are
submitted as portfolios of original student work that aim to show readers a wide range writing
ability.

All portfolios submitted to this category must adhere to the following:

• Portfolios must include five original poetic pieces.


• All five pieces must demonstrate a different poetic form.
• The submitted pieces for the portfolio may not be submitted individually in other Literary
Fair categories.
• Poems should follow poetic rules as appropriate to the individual form.
• Portfolios must be submitted to the District Literary Fair Canvas Course as a single file
that contains all five poems.

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Uploading Winning Entries for the District Literary Fair
Complete one digital entry form and corresponding document upload for each winning entry you are
submitting to the district fair.

BCPS Coordinators: Private / Charter School Coordinators:

Use this link to for the digital entry Use this link to for the digital entry
form/upload. form/upload.

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School-Based Coordinator’s Judging Course

A Canvas course has been created to assist schools with hosting and judging their own virtual
School Literary Fair. This course will allow schools to have student submissions judged virtually
and provide an streamlined method for determining which entries will be submitted to the
District Literary Fair. To be clear, this course is for school-based literary fairs and not for
submission or judging at the district level. Instructions on how to utilize this course are below:

Download Canvas Course Template from Commons


• Commons Search: BCPS Literary Fair School Based Judging
• Filter: Broward County Public Schools
• How do I import and view a Commons resource in Canvas?

Upload files to the course for judging


• How do I create a file link in a page in a course?

TIPS:
• Naming Convention: Category_Title (Ex: Fable_Summer Days)
• Ensure no students names are visible in the document
• Unpublish the module you are not using (high school coordinators, unpublish the middle
school module)

Generate a Self-Enrollment Code and send it to school-based fair judges


• How do I enable course self-enrollment with a join code or secret URL?

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